The AskHistorians Podcast
Ein Podcast von The AskHistorians Mod Team - Donnerstags
266 Folgen
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AskHistorians Podcast Episode 181: Questions on Greek and Roman Society with u/Toldinstone
Vom: 3.9.2021 -
AskHistorians Podcast Episode 180: Women in Medieval Warfare with /u/Hergrim
Vom: 19.8.2021 -
AskHistorians Podcast Minisode - Connecticut WWI Veterans with /u/IlluminatiRex
Vom: 5.8.2021 -
AskHistorians Podcast Episode 179 - Adam Contzen's Ten Books of Politics with The Contzen Project
Vom: 22.7.2021 -
AskHistorians Minisode - Was Beethoven Black? with Tyler Alderson
Vom: 2.7.2021 -
AskHistorians Podcast Episode 178 - History of Native California with Willy Bauer and Damon Akins
Vom: 25.6.2021 -
AskHistorians Podcast Episode 177 - The Argentine Revolution
Vom: 11.6.2021 -
AskHistorians Podcast Episode 176 - Catalan Art Songs with Jess Munoz
Vom: 3.6.2021 -
AskHistorians Podcast Minisode - Causes of the Great War
Vom: 27.5.2021 -
AskHistorians Podcast Episode 175 - The 275th Anniversary of Culloden with Dr Darren Layne
Vom: 22.5.2021 -
AskHistorians Podcast Minisode - German-Japanese cooperation with Lubyak
Vom: 13.5.2021 -
AskHistorians Podcast Episode 174 - The Lure of the Beach with Robert C Ritchie
Vom: 7.5.2021 -
AskHistorians Minisode - Persian Depictions of Alexander the Great with Trevor_Culley
Vom: 29.4.2021 -
AskHistorians Podcast Episode 173 - Hunt the Wumpus and Public Computing with Jason Dyer
Vom: 15.4.2021 -
AskHistorians Minisode - Uprisings in 19th Century China with EnclavedMicrostate
Vom: 8.4.2021 -
AskHistorians Podcast Episode 172 - The Hitler Diaries with PH Jones and Johannes Breit
Vom: 2.4.2021 -
AskHistorians Podcast Episode 171 - The Education Trap with Cristina Groeger
Vom: 18.3.2021 -
AskHistorians Podcast Episode 170 - Fugitive Freedom in Colonial Mexico with Bill Taylor
Vom: 4.3.2021 -
AskHistorians Podcast Episode 169 - Gaelic Work Songs with Meg Hyland
Vom: 18.2.2021 -
AskHistorians Podcast Episode 168 - Mandatory Palestine with Naama Cohen
Vom: 4.2.2021
The AskHistorians Podcast showcases the knowledge and enthusiasm of the AskHistorians community, a forum of nearly 1.4 million history academics, professionals, amateurs, and curious onlookers. The aim is to be a resource accessible to a wide range of listeners for historical topics which so often go overlooked. Together, we have a broad array of people capable of speaking in-depth on topics that get half a page on Wikipedia, a paragraph in a high-school textbook, and not even a minute on the History channel. The podcast aims to give a voice (literally!) to those areas of history, while not neglecting the more commonly covered topics. Part of the drive behind the podcast is to be a counterpoint to other forms of popular media on history which only seem to cover the same couple of topics in the same couple of ways over and over again.